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Articles

De-intensification and the Feminization of Farming in China1Footnote1

(Gender Advisor)
Pages 189-214 | Published online: 25 Oct 2017
 

Abstract

The Household Responsibility System (HRS) initiated in China in 1978 has brought about profound changes in gender roles and relations. This study examines the impact of land management patterns on women’s condition and position and the consequent changes in gender relations. The collective farming facilities of earlier times are now in disarray. Farming has become the primary occupation for women, particularly married women, while men look for better-paid jobs outside rural agriculture. The deteriorating condition of agricultural facilities is therefore impacting mainly women, who are bound to look after the land for family subsistence and security though there is little earning from it. At the same time, patriarchal norms are gaining a firm foothold. The preference for male children is becoming stronger as the rural system disintegrates and there are increasing intrahousehold conflicts. Women’s status is increasingly becoming incumbent on the husband’s property while they, in their own right, have little or no control over land.

Notes

1 This paper is part of the author’s M.S. dissertation ’The Household Responsibility System and Women’s Position: A Case Study of Two Villages in Zhejiang Province, China’ completed in December 1997, Asian Institute of Technology, Bangkok, Thailand. The author is grateful to Dr Harvey Demaine, Dr Govind Kelkar, Dr Reidar Dale and Dr Delia Davin for their comments and suggestions.

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